The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 17, 1948, Page 1

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” gEmm——— VOL. LXXiL, NO. 11,070 JUNEAU, ALASKA, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1948 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS — PRICE TEN CENTS New Law For Hunting Spies to Be Reguested LIQUOR DRINKING REDS GAIN s AT e GROUNDIN CHINAWAR |Beatty Says Irresponsible Whites Are Responsible- i Large Nationalist Force Is Wiped Out - Chiang’s Foster Wants No Bars “ ! Headquarters Moving (By The Associated Press) FORTY-HOURWORK |STATES' RIGHTERS WEEK WITH N PAY WILL BE WELCOMED Ch 31 AJOH 1 L0ss FoR RAILMEN DEMO PARTY DiNNER PRESIDENT o No Peace Moves Planned OF (HAMBER with Southerners, How- : elected President of the : | Chamber ot Commerce at a meeting| WASHINGTON, Dec. 17—P—|held on Wednesday by the Cham- By VERN HAUGLAND followers of the States'|cer's Executive Board. Eastaugh,| WASHINGTON, Dec. 17.—P—Al- ement may find the wel- | who present Ue, wired cohoiism among the 5000 Eskimos,| it for them when thelhis acceptance Aléuts and Indians is one of the| y stages its annual|will assume office on January 1.'greatest problems in Alaska, Inter-| kson Day dinners early | F he past year, Eastaugh has held | i Department experts on thef |the position of tary the |northern territory agree. qu\mmn(l headaquarte; 1 to be|Chamber. He succeeds Joseph A.| But, one of them said, prohibition |ing out of Pengpu tod: The three-man board recommend- | send invitations as a|McLean to the presidential pdst. |(is by no means the answer munists claimed to ed that present basic pay rates 1’f‘~u: indirect ure to; Robert Boochever, attorney, was The subject of liquor drinking by |the trapped 12th Ar the workers be increased by 20 perimany who strayed somewhat afield |elected First Vice-President and|the natives has been among topics|110,000 men. cent to provite “the same basiciin the el aign \Henry Green, Agent for the Alas-|discussed behind closed doors at the! Gen. Fu Tso-yi, commander in earnings in 40 hours of work as nrm; In fact, one Den tic official, |ka Stes hip Company, will be de tment’s 10-day conference on|North China, went through motions are paid for 48 hours. {who didn't want named told | Second Vice-President which ends today lof fighting for Peiping, which he porter: | B i T KR Is made these comments: lallowed the Communists to encircle The workers had asked a cut in|a - t the work week to 40 hours, without! “You may be surprised at how| Willard W. Beatty, education di-|with hardly a battle. He has been any reduction in “take-home” pay.|many of the so-called Dixlecrats & ;PVT. DANIEI. jAMES |rector for the Indian Bureau:|represented as trying to get an as good Demo- | |“There are many Americans who!agreement with his foe. A Commun- g i 3 |agreement w s foe | TO BE BURIED WITH and—on top of that—a 25 cents an.tend these dinner hour ‘wage increase. |crats.” think its fun to get an Eskimo or.jst spokesman in Hong Kong said The so-called NO PEACE MOVES | Indian drunk, to bait him as a!Fy is using Peiping as @ railroad workers are those It was emphasized, however, that| Spaniard baits a bull. There :u»o!mg point and that Communist not operate trains. here will te no peace moves from With full miitary honors, Pyt, Plenty of natives in the slums ox;.,-.;ol,, can take the city at will The board's recommendations, |the party toward those who took!paniel Geors James, son of Mr,;Juneau or Ketchikan who got li-; pengpu was anchor of the flims; made today to President Truman,ileading roles in the civil rights and Mrs. Frank James of Douglas, |9uor for the first time from ‘friends'| Hwal river defense line, 105 miles will be laid to rest in the Ever- Among the irresponsible whites.” {from the capital of Nanking. The green Cemetery tomorrow morning The funeral services will be held Rervice ; o L in the Chapel of the Charles w.| 'Next to the District of Columbia,|Nanking lies Alaska has the highest per capitaj It appeared likely the 12th Army A Emergency Board Makes': ‘ Recommedation for Million Men WASHINGTON, Dec. 17—® AY Presidential emergency board today |Prodigal recommended a 40-hour work week |Rights n without loss in y for the nation nillion non-operating railroad work: ers. The workers now are on a 48-h week. is at this morning and | Jefterson-Je our (next year began pull- > y after Com- e wiped out Group of to £ peace g ion cam to be “non-operating” ; who doi unions 139 southern electoral votes The board said that it felt the For inst no one expects the non-operating rail workers should national committee to invite either get the 40-hour week because “all{Gov. J. Strom Thurmond of South | other interstate industries have had|Carolina or Gov. Fielding L. Wright are not binding on the carriers or|volt which cost President Truman Don C. Foster, chief of the Alaska|next and last line the Yangtge Native iriver, on the south bark of which Carter Mortuary and will begin at| | 10 "olelapk. rate of liquor consumption in the.Group was indeed wiped out bargain- | Economic - Program | - For Japan WASHINGTON, Dec. 17.—(# The United States ordered into ef- fect today a new economic program lfor Japan, designed to speed re- tion General Douglas MacArthur w (told by the State and Army depart- | | Chiang Kai-shek’s East Chinajments to direct the Japanese 8ov-|(orney General Clark said today the ernment to carry out a series ot control measures aimed at ESPIONAGE | \Attorney General Makes lcovery and put brakes on infla-w ! achiev-| REVISION OF STATUTES 10 BF DEMANDED Top Agen(ie; Norking on | Revision-To Make Wire Tapping Legal Attorney General Clark said today that legalized wire-tepping will be LAWS T0 BE TIGHTENED Announcement Follow- ing Truman's Request WASHINGTON, Dec. 17 M—At- | for tight- espionage administration will ask ening of the nation's ing stability and increasing exports “as rapidly as possicl | 1 Included are tight controls on {taxes, wages, prices, rationing and; foreign trade. The measures were | described as similar to those which countries receiving American aid | under the economic cooperation ad- ministration already have adopted. The immediate purpose of the! program, officials told reporters, is! to strengthen the hands of Mat-| Arthur as supreme allled commander ! among the things which the Justice Department will recommend in ask- Ing Congress to tighten the espion- age laws. Clark told a reporter that propos= ed espionage law revisions have been under study by his department and other top agencies in the Gov- ernment for many months. He called attention to a section of the present law requiring proof of Intention and motive in order to prosecute a case successfully. laws soon the new Congress meets next month Clartk made the attending a meeting of Truman’s Cabinet at House. sas, fruman told his new confer- ence yesterday, in reply to a ques- | tion, that he had asked Clark to:® look into the possibility of tight- ening up the espionage laws. He said the Justice Department had | been studying the matter for some statement after President | the White | and of the Japanese government in rrying out a program of austerity which is expected to be unpalatable ' to the Japanese public - \EVANS RETURNS iw “Among other things,” Clark said, “we feel the law could be greatly strengthened by a revision of that ithin the Constitution’s Bill of |section. These things are very hard Rights. to prove and we feei changes could Today, Clark was asked what was |be made to aid prosecution.” being done by his Department| The Attorney General also said aleng the lines Mr. Truman men- a4 change in the statute of limita= tioned. He replied itions will probably te requested, in= We'll have some ofar as it bars prosecutions for es- time, but that it was a difficult matter to handle ‘and still stay recommenda the 40-hour week since 1938 when |of Mississippi to come back into the | the Fair Lator Standards Act was fold. They were the standardbearers | adopted.” 1for the States’ Rights ticket. ‘: Pvt. James was killed in Italy Jjust two weeks before the end of the war. Besides his parents, he is survived by the following brothers United States. The chief victim of jarger trapped group of 250,000 men this is the native. He doesn't buy'whose commanders had bungled in a drink, he buys a drunk staying too leng in Suchow, was “The Aleuts, particularly, cannot!peing compressed steadily by the| | IN WASHINGTON fsession—amendments to the pres- {ent statuies on espionage.” He refused to go in.c cetail. s | pionage activities after a given time. He indicated he will also renew the recommendations he made last February for strengthening of the The board recommended. that the On the other hand, it was indicat- ! railroads be given until Septemhcrlcd that a lot of other offi 1, 1949, to prepare for inaugura-)some of whom took lusty cracl jon of the shorter work week. {the President’s civil Meanwhile, it said, an immediate als—will find that seven cents hourly wage increase all, is forgiven. should be granted retroactive to Oc- TRUMAN ISN'T MAD tober 1. " 9 | President Truman has said he R jisn’t mad at anyone. While that ma ation Army will give the eulogy. ,not be strictly true of some of his! Honeymooners 10 iiciovers. i’ sencrat” trena amone? ; : rDemocratic leaders has been toward | Chester Zenger, Post Commander A'aska (e'ebra' Ipatching up, rather than widening,{of the Alfred John Bradford Post, take alcohol. The natives are nat-lReds. Aside from these troop: urally a good people, a very finestood in front of the half cople. T know of no factor that is!Communists pouring down 0 devastating as, or will extermi- ! Nanking. nate them more quickly than liquor.| Chiang stayed in seclusion. “In all of Alaska liquor Is the|friends have been urging him to ereatest single factor retarding th development of the Indians, the Bs- | kimo and the Aleuts.” Foster, contending prohibition is|capifal of China. The Government not the answer to the problem, said: [saiq nationalist forces are counter- “Prohibition wasn't successful in attacking with some success, but |the States. IChinese government reports have “There should be no bars, no cock- | seen notatly false. Only yesterday. tail rooms in Alaska. A package]for instance, government sources store business, like those of Oregon!saiq the 12th Army Group had es- |and Washington, mish{ provide bet-: caped. ter control.” | | little million toward ifand sisters: Mrs. Frank McKinley, : ; IHoonah; David James, Dougls 'x:it::& IT;UD::,;‘ T. R. Niere, Petersburg; Mrs. g jdoe Morolles, Juneau; Mrs, Ben! iBensqn, Yakutat; Julia James, IDouglas; Albert Billy James, Mt. 1 Edgecumbe. Major Eric Newbould of the Sal- resigii. Artillery fire echoed through Pei- tHe bty break. | American Legion, and Raymond | For this reason, most politicians|Beach, Chaplain, will participate SEATTLE, Dec. 17.—(®—Christ-{here think there is a lot of smoke|in the service. mas Day will be a double celebration but very little fire in the movement; Four Legionnaires will for a pioneer Washington couple. It ito thump the States' Righters’ heads | color guard at the cametary, Pall is their 50th wedding anniversary. by denying them important commit- | beareis will be Jimmie Fox, Will- The two, Mr. and Mrs. William C.|tee assignments in Congress. lam Kunz, David Wallace, Henry Prater, met in the Yakima Valley| NO SPECIAL MESSAGE | Anderson. s Willle Pet and in the 80's. Mrs. Prather, the for-' Mr. Truman told his news con-;George Edwards. A graveside salute mer Grace Darling Stephenson, had | ference yesterday he doesn't expect “,'fl be given by men from the arrived there from Fort Scott, Kas., |at this time to send any special mes-+ USCG Storis with Lt. A. B. How with her parents in 1877. Prather|sage to Capitol Hill on the civil in charge. made the trip west from Missouri|rights question. in 1883. | He said he doesn't think a separ- The Praters were married on|ate message will be needed—that Christmas Day, 1898, at Yakima. the objectives can be reached with- Their wedding trip was to Alaska jout it. These include laws to ban where Prater, representing packing istate pol! taxes, curb job discrimi- companies, furnishing much of the|nation, make lynching a federal of- meat for the gold rush camps. He|fense and halt Jim Crowism. numbered among his customers| But if he doesn’t get action, Mr. Skagway's famed bad man, Soapy Truman said he will ask for it iater. Smith. i The President’s decision against 'a special message now on these itopics was interpreted in some quar- ters as an indication he doesn't want to cuff the southerners unduly while his lieutenants are trying to enlist backing for other parts of his program form a S - BARTLETT WORKING IN WASHINGTON ON. DIFFERENTIAL CASE president of 1, National Employees, the pay a 7(‘llcr: e v o0 0 ¢ 0 00 WE w THER REPORT S WEATHER BUREAD) This data is “r 24-hour per- iod ending 6 am, PST, . . g 'SPEAKER URGES JCC " INVESTIGATION OF UPPED LIVING COSTS | 225, % g[7ees a ray of hope for differential problem in from E. L. (Bob) Bartlett “Bob Bartlett writes that he has met with several Civil Service Commission members,” said Fur- ness, “in an attempt to learn what is to happen in the way of a differential pattern “He presented arguments in fav- or of retaining the diiferential at its | In Juneau— Maximum, 34; minimum, 35. At Airport minimurm, 20, Maximum, 31; Milton J. Furness, FORECAST (Juneau Vicinity) Cloudy with rain occasion- ally mixed with snow tonight and rain showers tomorrow. Temperatures ranging in the middle and high thirties. Southeasterly winds 20-30 miles per hour, decreasing slowly Sunday. ! Citing the :act that living cos in Juneau are 26 per cent highe: than those in Seattle and even {bigher than costs in other State- s.de cities, Mrs. Mildred Hermann, ispeaking before the Junior Chamber 10i Commerce today, urged the or- ganization to dig up the reascn lor the big differential in costs, As long as Alaska must depend ! on one city’s wholesale market and ione transportation company for its|Present level, in view of t {supplies, any relief that might be;that no real study of the cos | jgained from a competitive market(living has been made recently.” must be lost to the Territorial con-| “Our Delegate really is doing|g | sumer, Mrs. Hermann said. !everything possible,” said Furness.| g The speaker, giving an overall re- ; Bartlett asked to appear before the | & view of the inflation picture in the|Commission prior to approval of g U. S. and Alaska, said that littlela recommendation. He empha-| relief appears in sight for the con-|sized to the Commission that thel Isumer as long as the European andjimportance of the matter justifies peace-time army spending is main-|his request. Moveover, he said| itained at its present high level. that, if any changes are contem- | Jaycees met this noon at the Bar-plated at all, he desired to be in he sald he does not have any. anof with John Quilico, vice presi-jon the conferences. The question was put to him atigent, taking charge of the meeting.! The Commission, which is re- {his news conference. A reporter saidjouijio announced that the usual sponsible for bringing up regula- there have been stories from Alaska:nongay night JCC meeting has been | tions to govern the differential, that Mr. Truman plans to visitl cancelied for Ohristmas week, but|will receive recommendations from there. The questioner wanted ‘“llhat the regular Friday luncheon|the Juneau NFFE investigators. know whether the President could(meeting will he held Federal employees are receiving say anything about that. —————— instruction through their own de- He replied he has ro plans of that| wALLIS GEORGE RETURNS |partment, “no two of them the sort. Wallis George of the Juneau|same,” according to Furness. 1Celd Storage Company returned on “It seems unlikely that there will Ithe Princess Norah after a brief [be any further information before stay in the States. George, a|the New Year,” he added. committee member for the financ- | S.I,o(K rm?A"o"s ing of: the Coast Guard building, | contacted men who do business | i NEW YORK, Dec. 17.—/#—Clos- ing quotation of Alaska ’ in the Territory while in the States. mine stock today is 3%, Twenty-three passengers came in- 5 . { to Juneau ,urpafn yesterday on the SOMMERS RETURNS { Pan American Airways plane irom R. J. Sommers of the Sommers Cnp 80%, Anaconda 33's, Curtiss- Seattle. No plane left for the South. Cuns‘truction Cempany, has return- | Wright 7', International Harvest- inconsequential conversation, Car-| Incoming passegers included:|€d via Pan American Airways fol-jer 27, Kennecott 56, New Yu_rk penter looked quizzically at Bourne 'Edith Shrenk, Max Penrod, James|!OWing a ten-day business trip to)Central 13'4, Northern Pacific 18%,| A jury in the District Court L {U. S. Steel 71'%, Pound $4.03%. found Meyers guilty of inducing Sales today were 1,010,000 shares. Bleriot H. Lamarre, wartime presi- g Dl IRyan, C. E. Albrecht, David Con- {Seattle. “Now what about your politics?” 'nell, R. J. Sommers, Walter Reams, BT >— Averages today are as follows: dent of a Dayton, Ohio, company, industriais 175.92, rails 5297, util- to testify falsely before a Senate Startled at the blatancy of a|Kenneth Weaver, Hank Cowan, NORTH STAR DELAYED question which is prohibited being Stanley Thompson, John Newmark-| The MS North Star was delay- asked of Civil Service applicants, er, James Daniels, John Fargher, ed in her departure from Sitka fities 33.14. WAL | Investigating - subcdmmities, Bourne replied: “What do you Iver Conn, Cliff Goodman, William and didn't sail for Juneau and g - - FROM 'NALASKA JUNEAU VISITORS Arthur J. Hains of Unalaska reg- Don Wolfe of Annette and Rich- mean?” | Glatke, Robert Allen, Peter Han- wayports until noon today. Alaska “T would like to know what your sen, Alder Conn, Erma Wainner, Native Service officials expect the John Ryan, Daisy Keene and Maude ship to arrive here on Snturday’istered yesterday at the Baranof ard Perry of Funter Bay registered Tagg. cvening. Hotel. yesterday at the Gastineau Hotel. STEAMER MOVEMENTS from Seattle, scheduled Is Christmas Denali, to arrive Sunday. ship. Alaska, from Seattle, to arrive late Monday. Princess Norah due early tomorrow afternoon bound. Baranof, from west, southbound Sunday. The Washington Merry - Go - Round Bv DfiEW PEARSON {Copyright, 1948, by 'I"h: Bell Syndicate, Inc. 1 | | [ . CITPITATION ending 7:30 a m. today Juneau — .35 inches; since Dec. 1, 93 inches; since July 1, 67.40 inches. At Airport 02 inches; since Dec .61 inches; since July 1, 46.48 inches. e scheduled . TRUMAN HAS HO ~..|” PLANS NOW FOR VISIT T0 ALASKA | ‘ WASHINGTON, Dec. 17—(P— President Truman was asked today about his plans to visit Alaska and scheduled 1, MEYERS ASKS THAT WASHINGTON, Dec. 17 Maj. Gen. Bennett E. Meyers ask- ea the Supreme Court today to throw out his conviction on charges of subornation to perjury —persuading another man to lie under oath | He told the high court in a peti- |tion that he did not get a fair Itrial and that the way he wa | treated is “disgraceful.” Juneau| Meyers, retired Air Force American | cer, has been in jail here ASHINGTON Ever since election Day, Secretary of Defense Forrestal has been frantically painting himself a true and loyal Democrat. But here is an off-the- record talk indicating the kind of men Forrestal puts in high posi- tion. The other day, Donald Carpenter,i Forrestal's newly handpicked chair- } man of the Munitions Board, called | in William Bourne of the State De- partment and suggested that hej take charge of the Munition Board’s press relations. After some - 23 ARRIVE FROM offi- since |of 18 months to five years impos- ed in U S, District Court here | i " (Continued on Page Four) His | HIS CONVICTION BE| \THROWN OUT, COURT! last March 15, serving a sentence { Attendance at the 15th National {Conference on Labor Legislation, {“sitting in” on some of the ses- sions of the National Minimum {Wage Conference, ~discussion m] i Alaska needs with bigh officials | Yin the Department of Labor, plus | {ping, the ancient and beautiful old |matters of routine business, kept|joned by Federal agents. E. Evans his frecent trip Outside { Evans, Alaska director for the {U. S. Department of Labor, re turned Monday after two weeks «spent chiefly in Washington, D.| |C ' | “In the capital Evans was partic- ‘ularly gratified by his discussions | ‘with William F. Patterson, Bureau lof Apprenticeship director for the 1Labor Department, concerning the possibility of getting a representa- tive for Alaska, i { At the conferences, “I was agree- ably surprised,” said Evans, “to learn how many states have made big improvements in minimum 'wu;;e. child labor, and workmen's ompensation laws. | i “Also,” he continued, “it is heart- |cning to see that most states are |soing all out to prevent accidents, ! { “The State of Washington has nade notable gains in the past year in reduction of accidents in the! loggpg industry, for instance, hroligh the accident prevention | !program.” Y Within discussed such as this one: In Alaska, where many young people work in the summer, em- rloyers often unintentionally vio- ylate the Child Labor provisions of jche Fair Labor Standards Act, Ev- ans is interested in veriiying ages| of young people with the Chil- jdren’s Bureau. Copies of the proceedings of theg Conference on Labor Legislation wiii be available in Evans' office ‘some time in January | Total attendance was 250 pers including 143 labor; comn and union pointed by Siate governor:. D { Leonard busy on the Department, Evans many specific problems I (COMPLETE SURVEY | GROUND WATER IN | SIX COMMUNITIES { i { | A survey of ground water M.p.)ly: {in six Southeast Alaska towns was |{completed this week. The project,| |aimed at securing ground water for Petersburg, Wrangell, Kake, Kla- {wock, Cralg and Hydaburg, was car- Iried on cooperatively by the U. S. |Geological Survey and the Territor- ial Health Department, D. J. Cederstrom, ground water expert from Charlottesville, Va., and | | that | more deeply into the case. H | pired at midnight Wednesday. Stispected “Spy’ Questioned :!.;\:uu‘h. dealing with alien regis- A% Olafk fade hie stetesieht, | rasons qx\d covering organizations and individuals accused of advocate Congressional spy hunters told re- . " A ing the violent porters the man accused of get- governmens nn:g the hnxc.“l. bumbsm.m uuk(.L Meanwhile, Rep. McDowell (R~ ior Russia_is. a ballistics expert - o gt R R qmw:Pni b “the House Un-Anferican 'Activities Committee reported from New York that he had “picked up some highly importan? and highly valuable information” in the Con= eressional spy hunt. overthrow®of this The House Un-American Activ- ities Committee also: Showed signs of reopening the Alger Hiss case by asking Francis. “ge 114 wWashington reporters over B. Bayre, former Assistant Secre- (i, ~istance’ telephons that: Be tary of State and Hiss' one-time had heard two witne in New boss, to be a witness Monday OF york today and had obtained some Tuesday “promisu, s - Assigned Rep. McDowell (R-Pa) sred lmlge;e:fe:y'fiha:h:rgl k::n:u{n to go to New York as a one-man wasnington, McDowell went to New sub-committee and question other yorp g¢ 4 one-man sub-committee witnesses about Hiss' activities back t5 hunt more evidence in the Alger in the 1830s |Hiss case. Kept its furious feud going with Clark earlier had told reporters, President Truman and the Justice gfter attending a meeting of Presi- Department. Mr. Truman Ish't dent Truman's cabinet at the White changing a bit his stand that the House, that his department would committee spy case is a “red make recommendations on esplon= herring.” That’s what he told a'age laws to the new Congress next news conference late yesterday. month. “Red Herring” Jeered ———t——t Committee members jeered at that, especlally si#e a New York SERUM GOES 'o grand jury indicted Hiss on a per- jury charge on evidence turned | up as a result of the committee’s | spy hearings. . Committeamen said they under- stood the bombsight spy suspect | testiiied that grand jury and ! @ new grand jury wiy go| Serum for a three-month-old It was :child stricken with influenza mens set up after the other jury ex-|IN8itls at Skagway, went aboard ' | the Princess Norah last night after attempts to seind the emergency medical supply by airplane were halted because of weather condi- tions. The child is the son of Mr. fand Mrs. C. L. “Barney” Ander- son. Anderson, now principal of jschools at Skagway, is a former {coach at the Juneau High $chool, having been here in 1944 and sev- eral years later. The serum, streptomycin, was put aboard the vessel by the Ter- iritorial Health Department after & ,lung-(li.slan('r' appeal vesterday 'Irum Dr. Fred Swanson, publie i health physician who is adminis= tering to the baby The Norah was due to arrive in Skagway at 8 o'clock inis morn= ing Rep. Mundt (R-SD), Acting Com- | mittee Chairman, has said the man | is a civilian employee of the Army at its Aberdeen (Md. proving ground but is temporarily on leave because 6f illness. The proving ground tests weapons and all sorts of equipment. The man §s described as an au- thority on such things as rockets, tombing tables and projectiles in general, but not anyone with a farcy title or salary .- Burns on Ship in Alaska Causes Suit SEATTLE, Dec. 17.—(#—Burns he suffered in an explosion and fire} June 28 aboard the cannery tender Miss D in Alaskan waters dam- aged him fo the extent of $25000, Anton Antonson, 31 years old, said in | an admiralty complaint filed in!| district court, | Antonson, an able-bodied seaman and cook aboard the vessel, also| asked $425 for the loss of personal|eq erai(, has been moved to the Al pfug)(fly against l.km William Ry dock where it will be moo Gil f‘ll Company, Seattle, operators until other arrangements can of the Mss D. made, according to Comm:ander J, R (G STORIS MOVES T0 ALASKA JUNEAU DOCK Coast Guard Cutter Storis, Jus| neau's newest permanently station-| ! Victor Rivers, consultant engineer from Anchorage, have spent the past month surveying in the six communities. Cederstrom, who came into Ju»‘ neau yvesterday, will return to Vir-| ginia for a month before returning 1to carry on ground water surveys in' ‘interior Alaska. A report on the work done in Southeast Alaska will be released within the next week. {had an opportunity to unload ecargo and get things in ship shape, wit no emergency calls during the p LONDON. Dec, 17 Princess arriving here last week. Elizabeth left Buckingham Pal- . e ace today for her first outing since Otters ean be tamed easily o R. Kurcheski Princess Elizabeth week. The Storis was called out the birth of her son, Prince Charles taught to retrieve ducks, like Newcomer Coastguardsmen hav. . s | Takes First Outing two quick runs within 24 hours % month ago. dogs.

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